Cuyahoga County:: The First 200 Years
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About this ebook
Judith G. Cetina Ph.D.
Judith G. Cetina, Ph.D., Cuyahoga County archivist, is a native Clevelander and Case Western Reserve and John Carroll University graduate. The images used are from the Cleveland Public Library photograph collection unless otherwise noted.
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Cuyahoga County: - Judith G. Cetina Ph.D.
Collection.
INTRODUCTION
Cuyahoga County totals 458.3 square miles in size and is bordered by Lake Erie to the north, Geauga and Lake Counties to the east, Lorain County to the west, and Medina and Summit Counties to the south. If asked to characterize this county of northern Ohio, most residents would note its reputation as a center for corporate and manufacturing interests and as a home for multiple institutions of higher learning, numerous cultural treasures, sports dynasties, and renowned medical facilities. Images of Terminal Tower, Cleveland Browns Stadium, Progressive Field, and Quicken Loans Arena would likely come to mind, along with Severance Hall, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Cleveland Playhouse, and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The names of the county’s prominent sons and daughters might also be recalled, including Kaye Ballard, Drew Carey, Tim Conway, Phil Donahue, Margaret Hamilton, Paul Newman, Jesse Owens (moved to Cleveland as a child), and British-born, but Cleveland-raised, Bob Hope. Others might think of opportunities for recreational activities, including visits to the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, boating on Lake Erie, or biking through the metroparks. Or perhaps some might remember a night out in the Warehouse District or on East Fourth Street.
But beyond the city of Cleveland—Cuyahoga’s county seat—58 other municipalities, villages, and townships in the county beckon to the visitor or perspective resident, offering tree-lined streets and homes that represent architectural styles ranging from Colonial to Tudor and Queen Anne to Victorian. Quiet town squares coexist with bustling commercial areas, and the landscape is dotted with hills and valleys, creeks and streams, falls and dams, parks and playgrounds, and hiking trails and residential sidewalks. All within the space of a day, one can travel from Lakewood Park to Cain Park in Cleveland Heights or perhaps tranquil Chagrin Falls and back to Huntington Beach in Bay Village or the county fairgrounds in Berea. And a journey throughout the county would not be complete without a tour of the many memorable ethnic neighborhoods noted for their magnificent churches, delicious food, and lively music, from Little Italy to Tremont and from Collinwood to Slavic Village. African Americans have also played an important role in the development of the county with their historical contributions preserved in collections at area institutions like the Western Reserve Historical Society. But where one now sees vital urban and suburban areas that blend ethnic, religious, cultural, and racial diversity, it is difficult to imagine its roots as a place of settlement for earlier civilizations dating to 2000 BCE. Excavations demonstrate that civilizations, like the Adena and Hopewell Mound Builders, flourished from about 800 BCE to 1000 CE in what is now Cuyahoga County. Considerably later Native American groups, including the Shawnees, Miamis, and Delawares, also made this area their home.
But centuries passed before Ohio became the 17th state to join the Union in 1803. It would take another five years until the Ohio General Assembly approved a statute dated February 10, 1808. This proclaimed that the part of Geauga County [that] lies west of the ninth range of townships
would become a separate and distinct entity to be known by the name of Cuyahoga, which would be organized whenever the population was sufficient to require it. Another two years would pass before Cuyahoga County was formally separated from Geauga and declared to be independent, effective May 1, 1810.
In 2011, it is clear that the county has indeed come a long way from frontier outpost to modern urban community. Its population has soared from an initial settlement of 1,459 in 1810 to 1,393,845 according to the 2000 census. While Cleveland remains the dominant municipality at 477,459, nine other cities have populations over 25,000, with Parma, the largest, at over 85,000 and Lakewood, Euclid, and Cleveland Heights each with over 50,000 persons. The population is many and varied with 34.1 percent declared minorities, including African American, Hispanic, Native American, and Asian residents, living in Cuyahoga County’s culturally rich and racially, ethnically, and religiously diverse communities.
The county’s workforce is active in a variety of areas, being employed in trade; manufacturing; transportation and utilities; construction; agriculture, forestry, and fishing; government; mining; finance; and the services industry, the largest, claiming the 32.6 percent of workers. Among the county’s major employers in 2000 were American Greetings, Case Western Reserve University, and the Cleveland Clinic Health System, with the University Hospitals Health System ranked in the top 15. The county’s high standing in the medical field can be attested to by its 5,949 physicians (medical doctors and doctors of osteopathy) and 23 registered hospitals in the year 2000.
But the county’s history is yet being written. Cuyahoga County remains well aware of its rich past rooted in Native American settlement, New England virtues and values, the rich traditions of ethnic communities, and the contributions of its heroic, generous, inventive, and talented citizens. And the area’s large number of historical societies, archival facilities, and museums preserves its heritage. But the county’s residents and leadership are forever looking forward with hope, confidence, and enthusiasm to a future filled with promise; one that will be marked by the increased use of wind energy, an enlivened lakefront, and an area that continues to offer world-class medical care.
One
CUYAHOGA COUNTY THE PREQUEL
The story of Cuyahoga County officially began in 1808 with legislation that enabled its creation and later made possible its full establishment in 1810. It is easy to imagine that the land the county encompassed stood barren, undiscovered, and unoccupied prior to the 19th century. This chapter will dispel that myth and illustrate the evolution the area experienced from the dwelling place of Native Americans who called the area Cuyahoga, which was a term that denoted crooked river, to a beckoning frontier attracting settlers of the newly formed United States seeking new opportunities and a better life. The lands constituting Cuyahoga County were also subject to international interests as Spain, France, and England, at various time prior to the Revolution, staked a claim to this territory. In 1783, England surrendered all title to the Thirteen Colonies, and Connecticut finally yielded its claims in 1786 but reserved the territory that would be known as the Connecticut Western Reserve. It consisted of 3.3 million acres and extended 120 miles west from the Pennsylvania border and some 70 miles south from Lake Erie. A section of the Western Reserve would eventually become Cuyahoga County, but over 20 years passed before this became a reality.